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US Navy Gets Tough with Pirates off Somalia
Issue 309
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QARAN Leaders Will Continue To Be Banned From Politics

Women Candidates In Somaliland's Upcoming Elections Agree To Cooperate

Somaliland Ministry Of Water & Minerals Soon To Publish Seismic Survey Data

A New Market Complex For Buroa, Togdheer

Ethiopia PM attacks UN on Somalia

'This isn't the US. This is South Africa!'

Somaliland Minister For Agriculture Opens Training At School Of Agriculture

Annals of Liberation: Bush-Induced Disaster in Somalia Grows

African Union warning over Somalia conflict

Why Tanzania should keep away from US

Sending Money And Ideas Home

Somalia's resources do not belong to clan: Federal official

Somaliland Classrooms

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People smuggling in the Horn of Africa

Italy pledges 450,000 Euros to support UNHCR emergency activities in Somalia

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US Navy Gets Tough with Pirates off Somalia

Somali refugees find a haven in Shelbyville

Hajj: It’s a Sea of Humanity at Mina

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Frankincense still a precious stock in Oman

U.S. Veteran Reveals Atomic Bombs Dropped On Afghanistan And Iraq

6 species of giraffe "discovered"

The Meaning of Peace in the Kenya 2007 Elections: Reflections

Rape a 'weapon of war' in eastern Congo

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Hon: My Dear Friend Abdillahi M Dualeh

Hurrah! Democracy Defeated Dictatorship

Colonel Yusuf And His Ultimatums: What Makes Him Blast?

Somaliland should be recognised

The Tribal Wailers

Spare a moment

Somaliland elders never tire and retire


Admiral William Fallon  (File Photo)
Admiral William Fallon

By Al Pessin

Washington, 21 December 2007 - The commander of U.S. forces in East Africa and the Middle East says he has ordered his naval commanders to take a tougher approach to pirates off the coast of Somalia, in an effort to help the region's economy and promote stability. VOA's Al Pessin reports from Washington.

In a year-end VOA interview, Admiral William Fallon said that, in recent months, pirates off the coast of East Africa have become bolder, attacking more and larger ships. So, he decided to do something about it.

"I have given some guidance to our naval commanders, and we've been able to get some approvals to do some things that are a little more aggressive than we had in the past We were pretty much in a passive mode," he said. "We're going to continue to operate in this area and to do everything we can to discourage this kind of activity."

U.S. navy ships recently laid siege to a pirated ship, and prevented the pirates from going ashore for supplies. They were forced to give up the vessel at what Admiral Fallon says was a reduced ransom, paid by the ship's owners. The U.S. Navy also destroyed the small boats the pirates use to get around the area off the coast of Somalia.

Admiral Fallon, the head of U.S. Central Command, says the piracy hurts the economy of the region because ships' captains are afraid to take their vessels through the area. And, he says, the piracy has a broader impact, too.

"It's the instability of it all," je said. "This kind of behavior, lawless behavior, if it's allowed to continue, just fosters an atmosphere of total disregard for accepted norms of behavior. And one thing leads to another, and if you allow this kind of behavior, whether it's ashore or afloat, typically there's a downward spiral. And that's what I think we've seen in this area. So, we're trying to clean up the neighborhood."

The U.S. Navy has estimated that at least 200 pirates work in the region, and until the recent crackdown, had operated a profitable criminal enterprise, stealing ships' cargos and demanding large ransoms for the return of the vessels and their crews.

Source: VOA


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